Im not planning on blinding burners with shitty vodka...Ill blind myself before anyone else...but anyone know the laws? Been all over the internet and cant get a definative answer..other than New York requires a license. Ive brewed beer before with good results, and would like to try vodka for a change. If it requires a license, so be it! Ill name it after BRC. Anyone in the distilling trade?...hiring?

skibear wrote:Our house in Maryland, built in 1939, had an origional ownerwith a still in the basement. One day while inebriated he crawlednext door along a wall and fell off breaking his arm.

I haven't continued this although I'd like to make home brewed beer.

I did beer a couple times...both pale ales. Didn't realize, till I started,but its legal to brew and consume your own beer at 18..up to a certain amount. Im wayyyyy over 18..just thought that was interesting. I wanna try vodka or rum.

Having a still seems to be like having indoor gardening lights.
Legal until you use them a certain way.
I grow tomatoes with mine.

Did the hidden compartment thread get pulled?
I've been meaning to start one anyway.
Every car and home should have hidden compartments or rooms.
Cars especially need storage for cash, papers, cameras, laptops, weapons.
It has actually been more common than not through history, to use concealment for security.
Thinking back, I have never had anything concealed, stolen.
We have been living in a rare secure period, and it's long gone in most places.
They were also common during the depression, for items not replaceable.

We now have insurance that won't pay off and ram raid burglars that expect an alarm.
Concealment is the best defense, even if it can only be used for the most valuable items.

It is an interesting challenge too, to design successful locations.

I find that the most successful hiding place, is a place that isn't normally a place.